Names Enrollment Number Krishna Naik 2036 Nidhi Desai 2040 Roshni Naik 2037 Kejal Agrawat 2025 Deepika Potdar 2012 Neel Shah2038 Submitted to: Mrs.Priyanka.

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Presentation transcript:

Names Enrollment Number Krishna Naik 2036 Nidhi Desai 2040 Roshni Naik 2037 Kejal Agrawat 2025 Deepika Potdar 2012 Neel Shah2038 Submitted to: Mrs.Priyanka Desai.

Training Employees

Orienting Employees Employee orientation – A procedure for providing new employees with basic background information about the firm. Orientation content – Information on employee benefits – Personnel policies – The daily routine – Company organization and operations – Safety measures and regulations – Facilities

Orienting Employees A successful orientation should accomplish four things for new employees: 1. Make them feel welcome. 2. Help them to understand the organization in a broad sense. 3. Make clear to them what is expected in terms of work and behavior. 4. Help them to begin the process of becoming socialized into the firm’s ways of acting and doing things.

The Training and Development Process Needs analysis – Identify job performance skills needed, assess prospective trainees skills, and develop objectives. Instructional design – Produce the training program content, including workbooks, exercises, and activities. Validation – Presenting the training to a small representative audience. Implement the program – Actually training the targeted employee group. Evaluation – Assesses the program’s successes or failures.

Make the Learning Meaningful At the start of training, provide a bird’s-eye view of the material to be presented to facilitate learning. Use a variety of familiar examples. Organize the information. So you can present it logically, and in meaningful units. Use terms and concepts that are already familiar to trainees. Use as many visual aids as possible.

Make Skills Transfer Easy Maximize the similarity between the training situation and the work situation. Provide adequate practice. Label or identify each feature of the machine and/or step in the process. Direct the trainees’ attention to important aspects of the job. Provide “heads-up” preparatory information that lets trainees know they might happen back on the job.

Motivate the Learner People learn best by doing so provide as much realistic practice as possible. Trainees learn best when the trainers immediately reinforce correct responses Trainees learn best at their own speed. Create a perceived training need in the trainees’ minds. The schedule is important too: The learning curve goes down late in the day, less than full day training is most effective.

Analyzing Training Needs Task analysis – A detailed study of a job to identify the specific skills required, especially for new employees. – like Java (in case of web developer) or interviewing (in case of a supervisior) – job requires. – Job descriptions and job specification are helpful here

 Performance analysis Verifying that there is a performance deficiency and determining whether that deficiency should be corrected through training or through some other means (such as transferring the employee). There are several methods from which we can use to identify a current employee’s trainning needs. 1. Performance appraisal 2. Observation by supervisors or other specialists

3. Job – related performance data (including productivity,absenteeism and waste, late deliveries, product quality ) 4. interviews with the employee or his or her supervisor 5. individual employee daily diaries

Competency Models Competence model is a standardized requirement for an individual to properly perform a specific job. It encompasses a combination of knowledge, skill, and behavior utilized to improve performance

Training Methods On-the-job training (OJT) – Having a person learn a job by actually doing the job. OJT methods – Coaching or understudy – Job rotation – Special assignments Advantages – Inexpensive – Immediate feedback

Steps in On the Job Training Step 1: Prepare the learner Step 2: Present the operation Step 3: Do a tryout Step 4: Follow up

Training Methods Apprenticeship training – A structured process by which people become skilled workers through a combination of classroom instruction and on-the-job training. Informal learning – The majority of what employees learn on the job they learn through informal means of performing their jobs on a daily basis. Job instruction training (JIT) – Listing each job’s basic tasks, along with key points, in order to provide step-by-step training for employees.

Training Methods Effective lectures – Use signals to help listeners follow your ideas. – Don’t start out on the wrong foot. – Keep your conclusions short. – Be alert to your audience. – Maintain eye contact with the trainees. – Make sure everyone in the room can hear. – Control your hands. – Talk from notes rather than from a script. – Break a long talk into a series of five-minute talk s.

Programmed Learning Programmed instruction (PI) – A systematic method for teaching job skills involving: Presenting questions or facts Allowing the person to respond Giving the learner immediate feedback on the accuracy of his or her answers Advantages – Reduced training time – Self-paced learning – Immediate feedback – Reduced risk of error for learner

Training Methods Literacy training techniques – Responses to functional illiteracy Testing job candidates’ basic skills. Setting up basic skills and literacy programs. Audiovisual-based training – To illustrate following a sequence over time. – To expose trainees to events not easily demonstrable in live lectures. – To meet the need for organization wide training and it is too costly to move the trainers from place to place.

Training Methods Simulated training (vestibule training) – Training employees on special off-the-job equipment so training costs and hazards can be reduced. – Computer-based training (CBT) – Electronic performance support systems (EPSS) – Virtual reality training

Distance and Internet-Based Training Tele-training – A trainer in a central location teaches groups of employees at remote locations via TV hookups. Video conferencing – Interactively training employees who are geographically separated from each other—or from the trainer—via a combination of audio and visual equipment. Training via Internet – Using the Internet or proprietary internal intranets to facilitate computer-based training.